Post on 19-Jul-2018
By John R. Haines
August 2015
WHERE THE LIONS ARE
GAZPROM'S "ENERGETIC PLIERS" AND ASPIRATIONS OF A
EURASIAN ARCHIPELAGO: THE GEOPOLITICS OF RUSSIA'S
NETWORKED ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
FO
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1 Quoted in Viacheslav Morozov (2007). “Energy Dialogue and the Future of Russia: Politics and Economics in the
Struggle for Europe.” In Aalto, P., ed. The EU-Russian Energy Dialogue: Europe’s Future Energy Security.
(Aldershot, UK: Ashgate), pp. 43-61. The quote is from a February 2003 speech by President Putin marking
Gazprom's tenth anniversary, the Russian language text of which is available at
http://kremlin.ru/events/president/transcripts/21873. Last accessed 1 June 2015.
The main title “Where the Lions Are” is from the Polish intellectual Czesław Miłosz, who used it to describe the
“white space on the map” between Russia and Germany. See: Miłosz (1983). The Witness of Poetry; The Charles
Eliot Norton lectures 1981/82. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press), p. 7. The term energetic pliers is taken from
a paper by Cosmin Gabriel Pacuraru (2012). “The Pressure Groups Relationship in the Romanian Energetic Security
Problem.” Challenges of the Knowledge Society. 2(2012).
The translation of all source material is by the author unless otherwise noted. 2 George Friedman (2014). “Taking the Strategic Intelligence Model to Moscow.” Stratfor Geopolitical Weekly (2
December 2014). http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/taking-strategic-intelligence-model-moscow#axzz3Kw9VXdet.
Last accessed 4 December 2014.
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3 Russian President Dmitri Medvedev first used this phrase in a 31 August 2008 interview. See: Dmitri Trenin
(2009). “Russia's Spheres of Interest, not Influence.” The Washington Quarterly. 32:4.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/01636600903231089. Last accessed 16 December 2014. 4 Nicu Popescu & Leonid Litra (2012). Transnistria: A Bottom-Up Solution. European Council on Foreign Relations
Policy Brief (September 2012), p. 5. http://www.ecfr.eu/page/-/ECFR63_TRANSNISTRIA_BRIEF_AW.pdf. Last
accessed 15 January 2015. 5 li aydar l te n ( 1 ). “Making the 'Heart' of Russian Territorialization: Railways and Moscow Railway
Stations.” Thesis submitted to the Graduate School of social Sciences of Middle East Technical University
(December 2010), 2-3. https://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12612826/index.pdf. Last accessed 2 June 2015. 6 The author adapted this definition from one offered by Andreas Hepp (2009). “Differentiation: Mediatization and
Cultural Change,” in Knut Lunby, ed., Mediatization: Concept, Changes, Consequences. (New York: Peter Lang),
149. http://www.andreas-hepp.name/hepp_2009.pdf. Last accessed 15 January 2015.
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7 The British geographer Sir Harold Mackinder was an early modern geopolitical thinker who developed what came
to be known as his “Heartland” theory. He postulated that whomsoever controlled Eastern Europe could control the
Heartland's extensive resources—in effect, Russia and the Black Sea littoral—and thus dominate the world (“‘Who
rules East Europe commands the Heartland; Who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island; Who rules the
World-Island commands the World.’”). For O'Hara's later rewording, see: Sarah L. O’ ara ( 4). “Great game or
grubby game? The struggle for control of the Caspian.” Geopolitics. 9:1, pp. 138-160.See: Corey Johnson &
Matthew Derrick (2012). “A Splintered Heartland: Russia, Europe, and the Geopolitics of Networked Energy
Infrastructure.” Geopolitics. 17:3, p. 482. Of course in one sense, “The most fundamental of all the elements of
national power is sheer location on the globe.” See: David J. M. Hooson (1966). The Soviet Union – A Systematic
Regional Geography (London: University of London Press), 338. 8 Aleksandr Panarin (1995). “Евразийство: за и против, вчера и сегодня.”
Вопросы Философии. (6), 8. The English translation of the article's title is “Eurasianism: pros
and cons, yesterday and today” [Russian transl.: Yevraziystvo: za i protiv, vchera i segodnya]. The article appeared
in the Russian journal, Questions of Philosophy [Russian transl.: Voprosy Filosofii]. 9 Ibid., 672.
10 Ibid., 677, 680.
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11
Vadim Tsymburskii (1993). “Остров Россия: Перспективы
Российской Геополитики.” Полис (5:1993). The English translation of the title is
“Island Russia: The Prospects of Russian Geopolitics” [Russian transl.: Ostrov Rossiia: Perspektivy Rossiiskoi
Geopolitiki]. It appeared in the bimonthly Russian language political science journal, Polis, the full name of which is
Политические Исследования [English: Political Studies. Russian transl.:
Politicheskiye Issledovaniya]. 12
Alexander Astrov & Natalia Morozova (2013). “Russia: geopolitics from the heartland,” in Stefan Guzzini, ed.
The Return of Geopolitics in Europe? Social Mechanisms and Foreign Policy Identity Crisis. (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press), 205. 13
Morozova (2009), op cit., 680-681. 14
Suggested by Morozova (2011). The Geopolitics of Russian Post-Soviet Identity: Geopolitics, Eurasianism, and
Beyond. Thesis submitted to Central European University Department of International Relations and European
Studies, 194. http://www.etd.ceu.hu/2012/iphmon01.pdf. Last accessed 4 December 2014. 15
Morozova (2011), op cit., 196. 16
Ivan Krastev & Mark Leonard (2014). “The New European Disorder.” European Council on Foreign Relations.
117 (November 2014), 3. http://www.ecfr.eu/page/-/ECFR117_TheNewEuropeanDisorder_ESSAY.pdf. Last
accessed 4 December 2014. Krastev & Leonard extend the “island” metaphor in another direction to suggest that
Europe is “facing its 'Galapagos moment'.” They write, “It may be that Euro e’s ost-modern order has become so
advanced and particular to its environment that it is impossible for others to follow. It evolved in a protective
ecosystem, shielded from the more muscular, 'modern' world where most people live.” 17
“Суверенитет—это политический синоним конкурентоспособности.” Transcript of Remarks by Deputy Head
of the Presidential Administration and Assistant to the President, Vladislav Surkov, to the students of the Centre
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Party education and training of United Russia, 7 February 2006.
http://www.rosbalt.ru/main/2006/03/09/246302.html. Last accessed 4 December 2014. 18
John Neubauer choses this as the title of his insightful 2003 essay, “What's in a Name? Mitteleuropa, Central
Europe, Eastern Europe, East-Central Europe.” Kakanien Revisited (7 May 2003).
http://www.kakanien.ac.at/beitr/theorie/jneubauer1.pdf. Last accessed 6 December 2014 19
A. Wess Mitchell (2009). “CEPA Commentary: The Perils of Losing Mitteleuropa.” Center for European Policy
Analysis. http://www.cepa.org/content/perils-losing-mitteleuropa. Last accessed 5 December 2014. Not surprisingly,
the Pravda columnist took a different view, writing “The greater immediate problem for Central Europe comes from
an America that prefers to see old Mitteleuropa, right up to the borders of Russia, as its sphere of influence simply
because it won the Cold War.” 20
Though outside the scope of this essay and a subject in its own right, the same might be said for eastern Ukraine's
Donbas, which is believed to hold substantial shale gas reserves.
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21
Mahan also makes the case that that political conditions generally, and social or political
upheaval specifically, can negate a site's strategic value. He dismissed Haiti as a base for just that
reason: “The country’s constant revolutionary u heaval, or socio olitical 'nothingness,' rendered
it 'an inert obstacle' to United States maritime strategy.” See: Andranik Migranyan (1993).
“Vneshnyaia Politika Rossii: Tri Vzglyada,” Moskovskie Novosti. Quoted in Morozova (2014),
8. 22
The United States Defense Department named eight international regions as “U.S. Lifelines and Transit Regions.”
See: United States Department of Defense (1996). National Security and the United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea, 2nd
edition [January 1996]. (Washington, DC: USDOD), 6.
http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/International_security_affairs/other/876.pdf. Last accessed 11 December 2014. 23
Johnson & Derrick (2012), 495. 24
Robert E. Ebel (2009). The Geopolitics of Russian Energy: Looking Back, Looking Forward. (Washington, D.C.:
Center for Strategic & International Studies), 38.
http://csis.org/files/publication/090708_Ebel_RussianEnergy_Web.pdf. Last accessed 11 December 2014. 25
Ibid., 483. 26
See: Julian S. Corbett (1911). Some Principles of Maritime Strategy. (London, Longmans, Green & Co), 87. The
full quote is from Moffat (2001), op cit., 20. Corbett's acceptance of this ambiguity has lead some to claim that he
“was a more pragmatic and therefore, a more effective strategist than Mahan.” See for example: Lieutenant
Commander Ian C.D. Moffat (2001). “ Corbett: A Man Before His Time.” Journal of Military and Strategic Studies.
4:1, 11. 27
Naama Haviv (2006). “Haviv on Lynch, 'Engaging Eurasia's Separatist States: Unresolved Conflicts and de Facto
States'.” H-Genocide [published online February 2006]. https://networks.h-net.org/node/3180/reviews/6285/haviv-
lynch-engaging-eurasias-separatist-states-unresolved-conflicts-and. Last accessed 12 December 2014.
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28
While Russia's titular ethnic republics account for 29 percent of the Federation's territory, only four of thirty-one
(North Ossetia-Alanoa, Tuva, Checheno-Ingushetia, and Chuvashia) had an absolute majority of the titular ethnic
group. See: James Hughes & Gwendolyn Sasse (2002). Ethnicity and Territory in the Former Soviet Union: Regions
in Conflict. (New York: Frank Cass Publishers), 41. To this should be added that Russia also recognizes the
potential for the creature to mutate and turn back against Russian interests: in October 2013, Russian Prime Minister
Dmitry Medvedev told the congress of the United Russia party that state officials must oppose ethnic enclaves in
Russian cities. See: “Medvedev opposes ethnic enclaves in Russian cities.” RT [published online in English 7
October 2013]. http://rt.com/politics/russia-ethnic-enclave-medvedev-829/. Last accessed 4 December 2014. 29
Hughes & Sasse (2002), op cit., 24.
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30
Aleksandr Dugin (1997). Osnovy geopolitiki: geopoliticheskoe budushchee Rossii. (Москва: r togeia), 343. Its
English title is The Foundations of Geopolitics: The Geopolitical Future of Russia. Dugin's book was described by
one reviewer as a “Neo-Eurasian Textbook.” [John B. Dunlop (2001) in Harvard Ukrainian Studies, 25:1/2 (Spring
2001), pp. 91-127]. 31
“Separatism in Europe: current and medium term assessment.” Slobodna Vojvodina [online English language
edition, 23 January 2012].
http://www.slobodnavojvodina.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1825:eu-analysis-europe-
union-of-regions-rather-than-states&catid=49:english&Itemid=62. Last accessed 9 December 2014. 32
Ibid., 92-93. 33
James A. Anderson & Liam O'Dowd (1999). “Borders, Border Regions and Territoriality: Contradictory
Meanings, Changing Significance.” Regional Studies. 33:7, 602.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/00343409950078648. Last accessed 10 December 2014.
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ț ă
ă ș
ă ș
34
Budzha (Russian, U rainian & Bulgarian: Буджак. Romanian: Bugeac) is a geogra hic region com rising the
southernmost one-third of historic Bessarabia. 35
Vulcănești is the district's Romanian name (Districul Vulcănești) and its main city. In Gagauz its name is is
Val aneş. 36
Source: Association of European Border Regions.
http://www.aebr.eu/en/members/member_detail.php?region_id=113. Last accessed 10 December 2014.
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37
Source: “MapRegionsRomania”. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons -
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MapRegionsRomania.png#mediaviewer/File:MapRegionsRomania.png.
Author's note: The Budzhak region of Ukraine's Odessa Oblast is identified on the map as “Bugeac,” its name in
Romanian. 38
The Danube Delta is the area downstream of the Danube's first bifurcation at Cheatal Chilia. A second bifurcation
some 10km south of Tulcea forms the Danube's three distributaries or branches. From north to south, the three
distributaries are the Chilia [U rainian: Кілійське гирло. U rainian transl.: Kiliysʹke hyrlo. Romanian: Braţul
Chilia], the Sulina, and the St. George [Romanian: Sfântu Gheorghe]. 39
Ibid., 172-173, 211.
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40
Transylvania was and remains especially problematic because in its an interior region rather than a borderland. 41
This conce tion relates directly to the United Nations igh Commission for Refugees’ rinci le of “first host
country” or as it is known within the EU, the “safe third country” policy. That policy allows EWU member-states to
consider an asylum-seeker's route in determining whether s/he could have sought refuge at a previous border, i.e., a
“safe third country,” in which her or his asylum application could have been made. If so, the policy allows the
asylum-seeker to be returned to that state. 42
Alan Dingsdale (1999). “New Geographies of Post-Socialist Europe.” The Geographical Journal. 165:2, 145-153. 43
Sarah Collinson (1996). “Visa Requirements, Carrier Sanctions, ‘Safe Third Countries’ and ‘Readmission’: The
Develo ment of an sylum ‘Buffer Zone’ in Euro e.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographer. 21:1, 76-
90. 44
Witold Maciejewski (2002). The Baltic Sea Region: Cultures, Politics, and Societies. (Uppsala: The Baltic
University Press), 112. 45
Sabine Dullin (2014). La frontière épaisse. Aux origines des politiques soviétiques (1920-1940). (Paris: Editions
de l’E ESS). 46
Robert D. Kaplan (2009). “The Revenge of Geography.” Foreign Policy.
http://www.colorado.edu/geography/class_homepages/geog_4712_sum09/materials/Kaplan%202009%20Revenge%
20of%20Geography.pdf. Last accessed 19 May 2015.
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47
A quick primer is in order. A natural gas delivery system is comprised of three separate but interconnected
pipeline systems, a gathering pipeline system, a transmission pipeline system, and a distribution pipeline system,
respectively.47
Our interest here is mostly with the transmission pipelines used to move large quantities of natural
gas from processing plants located in production regions to often-distant local distribution systems. Transmission
systems are designed as either trunk or grid “branch” type systems. Trunk transmission systems have fewer receipt
points—usually at the beginning of its route—and fewer delivery points, interconnections with other pipelines, and
associated lateral lines.47
High pressure (200-1500psi) within the pipeline reduces the volume of the gas and propels
it through the pipeline to a terminus known as a gate station. There, it is delivered through a distribution pipeline
system to consumers. 48
Erickson (2009), 35. Almost 80 percent of Russian gas exports pass through the Ukraine, with 11 percent further
transiting Moldova. 49
There is an extensive body of investigative literature that concludes Russia “employs a 'systematic policy of
coercive bilateralism that includes diplomatic pressure, trade embargoes, transport blockades and...gas or oil supply
contracts.” See: Peter Pomerantsev & Michael Weiss (2014). The Menace of Unreality: How the Kremlin
Weaponizes Information, Culture and Money. Institute of Modern Russia [published online in English], 22.
http://www.interpretermag.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/The_Menace_of_Unreality_Final.pdf. Last accessed
15 December 2014. See also: David Satter (2014). The Last Gasp of Empire, Russia’s Attempts to Control the Media
in the Former Soviet Republics. Washington, D.C.: Center for International Media Assistance.
http://cima.ned.org/sites/default/files/CIMA-Russia%20report_David%20Satter.pdf. Last accessed 15 December
2014.
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50
Johnson & Derrick (2012), 486. 51
Ibid. 52
Johnson & Derrick (2012), 487. 53
Ibid., 484.
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54
Ibid. 486. 55
From the title of an essay by Sergei Medvedev (1999). “Across the line: borders in post-Westphalian landscapes.”
In Heikki Eskelinen, Ilkka Liikanen & Jukka Oksa, eds. Curtains of iron and gold. Reconstructing borders and
scales of interaction. (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishers), 43-56. 56
The quoted text is from Oren Yiftachel and As'ad Ghanem (2004). “Understanding ‘Ethnocratic’ Regimes: The
Politics of Seizing Contested Territories.” Political Geography. 23:6, 650.
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57
See: Marin Katusa (2014). The Colder War. (Hobocken: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.). 58
See: Harley Balzer (2006). “Vladimir Putin’s cademic Writings and Natural Resource Policy.” Problems of
Post-Communism. 53:1, 3-14. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.2753/PPC1075-8216530105. Last accessed 9
January 2015. In 1997, Mr. Putin defended his doctoral thesis at the St. Petersburg Mining Institute, regarding
which, “The actual thesis is not available to the general public as it has been classified by the Russian government.
However, using the accounts of others who have read the thesis, as well as an article that Putin wrote immediately
after defending the thesis, Balzer is able to reconstruct some of its main arguments.” See: Andrej Krikovic (2012).
Ties That Do Not Bind: Russia and the International Liberal Order. (Berkeley, CA: UC Berkeley Electronic Theses
and Dissertations), fn(273) on p. 68. 59
Vladimir V. Putin (1993). Mineral'no syr'yevyye resursy v strategii razvitiya Rossiyskoy ekonomiki. 44 Zapiski
Gornogo Instituta. The Russian title [Минерально сырьевые ресурсы в стратегии развития Российской
экономики] translates as “Mineral Natural Resources in the Development Strategy of the Russian Economy.” 60
Gazprom is the shortened name of Gazovaya Promyshlennost' [Russian: Газовая Промышленность] or “Gas
Industry.” It emerged from the 1989 reorganization of the Soviet Ministry of Gas Industry [Russian: Министерство
Газовой Промышленности. Russian transl.: Ministerstvo Gazovoy Promyshlennosti. The name of the Ministry,
which was privatized in 1991, was customarily shortened as Minazprom. 61
Ibid., 51. 62
Marshall I. Goldman (2008). Oilopoly: Putin, Power and the Rise of the New Russia. (Oxford: Oneworld), 97-99.
Cited in Krikovic (2012), op cit., 69. It might be argued as well that Putin is a mercantilist of the sort defined by
Robert Gilpin, viz., the “essence of the mercantilist perspective is the subservience of the economy to the state and
its interests.” See: Gilpin (1975). US Power and the Multinational Corporation: The Political Economy of Foreign
Direct Investment. (New York: Basic Books), 25.
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63 Pierre No l ( 9). “European Gas Security After The Crisis.” Paper written for the European Council on Foreign
Relations (ECFR) Submitted to the EU Policy Seminar on “EU Policy on Russia: The Way Forward in 2009”
European Commission, DG Relex & Czech Presidency of the Council – Brussels 23 April 2009.
http://www.eprg.group.cam.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/pn_eugassecurityafterthecrisis_090423.pdf. Last
accessed 9 January 2014. 64
Moldovan nationalists in 1988 demanded the adoption of Moldovan as the official language, and the replacement
of the Cyrillic alphabet by the Latin one. On 31 August 1989, the MSSR Supreme Soviet adopted three new
languages laws declaring Moldovan the “state language” and mandating a transition to the Latin alphabet (which
was seen as implicitly recognizing the unity of the Moldovan and Romanian languages). [Charles King (2000). The
Moldovans: Romania, Russia, and the Politics of Culture. (Palo Alto, CA: Hoover Institutions Press), 120]
Opposition from Slavic and Turkish minorities led to declarations by new nationalist movements that the language
question would ultimately lead to Moldova's formal integration into Romania. [Helen Fedor ed. (1995). Belarus and
Moldova: Country Studies. (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office), pp. 109-10. Also: King (2000), op cit.,
142.] Adoption of the 1989 language law led the following year to the August 1990 declaration of a separate
“Gagauz Republic”; Transdniestrians did the same the following month (later called the Pridnestrovien Moldavian
Republic aka Pridnestrovie). These actions were similar in their opposition to what was seen as an unwarranted
expansion of Moldovan central authority. They differed, however, in that while Gagauz demands were meant to
preserve ethnic sovereignty and equal representation, Transdniestrian demands were intended to position an
independent Pridnestrovie to join Russia or Ukraine. 65
Case in point the December 2013 Moldovan constitutional court declaration that the official language is “the
Romanian language,” greeted by Romanian President Traian Băsescuu as “an act of justice...for those who feel they
are Romanians.” See: http://www.antena3.ro/en/romania/basescu-welcomes-the-constitutional-court-s-decision-
declaring-romanian-as-the-official-language-of-237093.html. Last accessed 7 January 2014. 66
These fears are not without foundation: in early 14, Romania's acting resident Traian Băsescu said, “If you
ever have roblems on your way to the Euro ean Union, just call Bucharest and say ‘we want to unite’ and it will
ha en … no matter who will be the resident of Romania, whether a right or left governing arty, we will want
unification.” Mila Corlateanu (2014). “Much ado about Moldova.” New Easter Europe [online edition, 28 April
2014]. http://www.neweasterneurope.eu/interviews/1209-much-ado-about-moldova. Last accessed 23 December
2014.
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67
Vladimir Kolossov & John O'Loughlin. (1999). “Pseudo-States as Harbingers of a New Geopolitics: The Example
of the Trans-Dniester Moldovan Republic (TMR),” in David Newman, ed. Boundaries, Territory and
Postmodernity. (Portland, OR: Frank Cass Publishers), 159. 68
Jeffrey D. Owen (2009). “Neopatrimonialism and Regime Endurance in Transnistria.” Thesis submitted to the
faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (10 September 2009), 2-3.
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09222009-154007/unrestricted/Owen_JD_T_2009.pdf. Last accessed 23
December 2014. 69
Source: http://micto.cz/2013/02/25/chernivetski-chynovnyky-vidznachyly-20-tu-richnytsyu-stvorennya-
karpatskoho-jevrorehionu/. Last accessed 21 May 2015.
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70 Vladim r Bil , le ander Duleba, Michal lya & Svitlana Mitryayeva ( 1). Role of the Carpathian
Euroregion in Confronting its Minority Agenda. (Prešov, Slova Re ublic: Research Center of the Slovak Foreign
Policy Association), 8. http://www.sfpa.sk/dokumenty/publikacie/22. Last accessed 22 December 2014. 71 Preface by Dr. ac She herd, in va Bl nesi (1998). “Ethnic Early Warning Systems and Conflict Prevention.”
In GSFI Occasional Paper No. 11. (Cambridge: University of Cambridge), 8-15. 72
There are “strong legitimate interest from the CEE countries regarding the representatives of their ethnic groups
which are the minorities on the territories of the Euroregion neighboring countries.” See: Svitlana Mytryayeva
(2004). “Role of the Carpathian Euroregion in strengthening security and stability in Central Eastern Europe.”
Academic and Applied Research in Public Management Science- AARMS. 3:4, 552.
http://www.zmne.hu/aarms/docs/Volume3/Issue4/pdf/06mytr.pdf. Last accessed 14 January 2015. 73
Izabela Suchanek (1996). “Problems and Possibilities for Political Cooperation in the Carpathian Euroregion: The
Role of Local Government.” In GSFI Occasional Paper No. 11. (Cambridge: University of Cambridge).
https://www.dartmouth.edu/~gsfi/gsfiweb/htmls/papers/text5.htm. Last accessed 22 December 2014. 74
For a focused discussion of this question, see the author's essay “ r talja: Euro e’s Ne t Crimea ” at
http://www.fpri.org/articles/2014/04/karpatalja-europes-next-crimea. There also are separatists among the
Transcarpathian borderland's ethnic Ruthenians, sometimes called by the Ukrainian transliteration Rusyns
(Ukrainian: Русини. U ranian transl.: Rusyny]. This movement, too, has political ties in Ukraine's near-abroad,
especially in Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, and Romania. In October 2008, the “Congress Of Carpathian
Ruthenians” declared formation of the “Republic of Carpathian Ruthenia.” In December 2014, the unrecognized
republic's prime minister, Peter Getsko, declared “Transcarpathia is the second front in the fight for decentralization
of power in Ukraine, along with Donetsk and Lugansk.” Several months earlier, Getsko in June 2014 signed an
“interstate treaty of alliance” in Yalta with the Union of People's Republics of Novorossia [Russian: Союз
Народных Республик. Russian transl.: Soyuz Narodnykh Respublik], which is a confederation of eastern Ukraine's
self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic and Lugansk People's Republic, respectively. 75
Source: http://en.reseauinternational.net/hungarian-factor-transcarpathian-fragment-ukrainian-patchwork/. Last
accessed 23 December 2014.
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76
Ibid. There are large ethnic Hungarian populations in neighboring states, including over 150,000 in Ukraine, more
than a quarter-million in Serbia (specifically the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina), some 460,000 in Slovakia,
and more than 1.2 million in Romania. The Hungarian government actively promotes kinship ties with these
communities. Case in point, Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjén announced in December 2014 that Hungary is set
to have one million new citizens through its dual citizenshi scheme by the end of the current government’s mandate
in 2018. See: “New Hungarians through dual citizenship scheme to number 1 million by 2018, says Semjén.”
Politicis.hu [published online in English 29 December 2014]. http://www.politics.hu/20141229/new-hungarians-
through-dual-citizenship-scheme-to-number-1-million-by-2018-says-semjen/. Last accessed 13 January 2015.
Hungary's Jobbik political party goes one step further: Jobbik member and EU Parliament delegate Béla Kovács —
whom the Hungarian online newspaper 444.hu in May 2014 suggested was a Moscow spy — had an office in
Beregszász (Berehove) until he was expelled from Ukraine in August and his office was closed by order of the
Transcarpathian regional administrative court. See: “Béla, a Jobbik moszkvai kapcsolata” (“Béla, Jobbik's Moscow
contact”). 444.hu [published online in Hungarian, 15 May 2014]. http://444.hu/2014/05/15/bela-a-jobbik-moszkvai-
kapcsolata/. Last accessed 13 January 2014. For the closing of Kovács' Transcarpathia office, see: Zoltán Szécsi
(2014). “Ukrainian court orders closure of office of suspected spy and Jobbik MEP.” Politics.hu [published online in
English, 13 October 2014]. http://www.politics.hu/20141013/ukrainian-court-orders-closure-of-suspected-spy-and-
jobbik-meps-office/. Last accessed 132 January 2014. 77
International Energy Agency (2012). Ukraine 2012. (Paris: IEA), p. 109.
http://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/Ukraine2012_free.pdf. Last accessed 22 November
2014. 78
“Uzhgorod controls 80% of the gas exported to Europe.” Uzhgorod.in [published online in English, 9 September
2012]. http://uzhgorod.in/en/news/2012/aprel/uzhgorod_controls_80_of_the_gas_exported_to_europe. Last accessed
22 November 2014. 79
The practice of “reverse flow” involves the re-exportation of natural gas; that is, the purchase of gas by Country A
from Country B, and its subsequent resale by Country A to a third country, Country C. According to Gazprom, three
countries-- Slovakia, Hungary and Poland-- re-exported as much as 1.7 billion cubic meters of Russian gas to
Ukraine during the first nine months of 2014. See: “Poland, Hungary, Slovakia export Russian gas to Ukraine —
Gazprom.” ITAR-TASS [published online in English, 3 October 2014]. http://en.itar-tass.com/economy/752564. Last
accessed 24 November 2014.
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80
Data source: East European Gas Analysis (2009). http://www.eegas.com/ukr_090115e.htm. Last accessed 25
November 2014. 81
The data in this column are from Manfred Hafner (2012). Russian Strategy on Infrastructure and Gas Flows to
Europe. Polinares Working Paper n. 73 (December 2012), p. 2. http://www.polinares.eu/docs/d5-
1/polinares_wp5_chapter5_2.pdf. Last accessed 25 November 2014.
24 | F P R I
82
Source: http://www.hunsor.se/hu/karpatalja/carphatianbasin.jpg. Last accessed 13 January 2014. 83
Strictly speaking, the Transcapathian Basin is a sub-basin of the Carpathian (Pannonian) Basin, which covers a
124,000 square mile area largely inside of Hungary, Romania and Slovakia, with small parts inside Ukraine. A
number of uplifted basement blocks separate the Carpathian (Pannonian) Basin into several subbasins, among which
is the Transcarpathian. See: Vello Kuuskraa, et al. (2011). World Shale Gas Resources: An Initial Assessment of 14
Regions Outside the United States. (Arlington, VA: Advanced Resources International, Inc.), VI-17.
http://www.adv-res.com/pdf/ARI%20EIA%20Intl%20Gas%20Shale%20APR%202011.pdf. Last accessed 29
November 2014.
25 | F P R I
84
While Ukrainian domestic natural gas production covered about 40% of domestic gas consumption — about 19.3
billion cubic meters — this figure pales against the 68.7 bcm extracted in 1975 and 1976, when Ukraine's domestic
gas production peaked at one-quarter of the Soviet Union's total natural gas extraction. See: Tania Marocchi & Taras
Fedirko (2013). “Shale gas in Poland and Ukraine: a great potential and an uncertain future.” Portal on Central,
Eastern and Balkan Europe (May 2013), 9. 85
Gordon Little (2012). “How Would the Development of Shale Gas Resources in Ukraine Impact Europe's (energy)
Security? IAEE Newsletter. 1st Quarter 2012, 48. http://www.iaee.org/documents/2012WinterEnergyForum.pdf. Last
accessed 22 December 2014. The European Commission apparently agrees, declaring in mid-2014 “ “The Union
should work closely with its neighbours and partners within the Energy Community, notably Ukraine and Moldova,
to improve energy security”.” 86
Mychajło Honczar (2013). “First steps into the unknown. The prospects of unconventional gas extraction in
Ukraine.” OSW Commentary [English language report dated 27 April 2013]. Center for Eastern Studies (Warsaw),
5. http://www.osw.waw.pl/sites/default/files/commentary_106.pdf. Last accessed 22 December 2014. 87
InvestUkraine (2012). “Oil & gas industry.” http://investukraine.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Oil-gas-
industry_230_230.pdf. Last accessed 22 December 2014. 88
The protest at on Maidan Nezalezhnosti the evening of 21 November 2013 is generally recognized as the
beginning of what became the Euromaidan movement. Stanley Reed & Andrew E. Kramer (2013). “ Chevron and
Ukraine Set Shale Gas Deal.” The New York Times [online edition, 5 November 2013].
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/06/business/international/chevron-and-ukraine-sign-deal-on-shale-
gas.html?_r=0&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1417281775-vedKsAeA50Wil53RKI8oRg. Last accessed 28 November 2014.
In December 2014, Chevron terminated the Oles'ka Block development agreement.
26 | F P R I
89
“Potemkin observers.” The Economist [published online 4 November 2014].
http://www.economist.com/blogs/easternapproaches/2014/11/ukraines-rebels-and-eurosceptics. Last accessed 22
December 2014. 90
Keith Johnson (2014). “Hungary Is Helping Putin Keep His Chokehold on Europe's Energy.” Foreign Policy
[published online 6 November 2014]. http://foreignpolicy.com/2014/11/06/hungary-is-helping-putin-keep-his-
chokehold-on-europes-energy/. Last accessed 13 January 2015. 91
Blanka Zöldi (2014). “State energy company MVM may lose USD 2.6 billion on purchase of E.ON gas
subsidiary.” The Budapest Beacon [online English language edition, 20 August 2014].
http://budapestbeacon.com/public-policy/state-energy-company-mvm-may-lose-usd-2-6-billion-on-purchase-of-e-
on-gas-subsidiary/. Last accessed 13 January 2014. Eight years earlier, in 2006 E.ON bought the company from
MOL, Hungary's state oil and gas monopoly. 92
See: “Akár 600 milliárd forint veszteséget okozhat az Eon földgáz-nagy eres edő megv s rl sa.” Atlatsxo.hu
[published online in Hungarian 13 August 2014]. http://atlatszo.hu/2014/08/13/akar-600-milliard-forint-veszteseget-
okozhat-az-eon-foldgaz-nagykereskedo-megvasarlasa/. Last accessed 13 January 2015. The 20-year contract with
Hungary's largest gas importer, Panrusg z (a Gaz rom subsidiary), is subject to renegotiation in 1 . 93
“Gazprom Stores Some of its Natural Gas in Hungarian Facilities.” Hungarian Spectrum [published online in
English 16 October 2014]. https://hungarianspectrum.wordpress.com/2014/10/16/gazprom-stores-some-of-its-
natural-gas-in-hungarian-facilities/. Last accessed 13 January 2014.
27 | F P R I
94
“Mi lehetünk Európa gázközpontja.” Magyar Nemzet [published online in Hungarian 18 September 2014].
http://mno.hu/magyar_nemzet_gazdasagi_hirei/mi-lehetunk-europa-gazkozpontja-1248359. Last accessed 13
January 2015. 95
On 1 December 2014, President Putin announced the cancellation of the South Stream pipeline, which would have
brought a maximum capacity of 63 billion cubic meters of natural gas across the Black Sea into Bulgaria. There, the
pipeline would have split, one branch supplying the Balkans and Austria, with the other eventually supplying
northern Italy. Gazprom confirmed on 9 December that the decision to abandon the project was final. See: “The
Cancellation of South Stream is a Pyrrhic Victory, At Best.” The Brookings Brief [published online 18 December
2014]. http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/up-front/posts/2014/12/18-south-stream-pipeline-boersma. Last accessed 13
January 2014. 96
KPMG International (2012). Central and Eastern European Shale Gas Outlook, 65.
http://www.kpmg.com/Global/en/IssuesAndInsights/ArticlesPublications/shale-gas/Documents/cee-shale-gas-4.pdf.
Last accessed 13 January 2015. 97
This is Turkmen gas imported via Bothli Trade AG, a Swiss corporation controlled by Dmitry Firtash. He is a
Ukrainian oligarch with close ties to Russia. In June 2013, the United States Department of Justice indicted Firtash
on charges of money laundering, racketeering and bribing Indian officials. He was arrested in Vienna in March 2014
at the request of United States authorities but later freed on €1 m bail. See: “Russia-linked Ukrainian oligarch
indicted in US.” Financial Times [published online 3 April 2014]. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/6f7e275e-baab-
11e3-8b15-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3Oio7nP8I. Last accessed 13 January 2014. 98
KPMG (2012), op cit., 65.
28 | F P R I
99
Hungary's transmission pipeline system was connected to the Soviet natural gas network in 1975, and in 1996, a
transmission pipeline between the Austrian border and Győr created a two-way supply system that was connected to
the European network. 100
They are not alone in this recognition: a well-respected European think tank earlier declared its “appreciation for
the key role that Transcarpathia plays in the stability and security of East Central Europe.” See: European Center for
Minority Issues (1999). Inter-Ethnic Issues in Transcarpathian Ukraine. ECMI Report #4 (September 1999), 49.
http://www.ecmi.de/uploads/tx_lfpubdb/report_4.pdf. Last accessed 14 January 2015. 101
Andreas Heinrich (2014). Export Pipelines from the CIS Region: Geopolitics, Securitization, and Political
Decision-Making. (New York: Columbia University Press), 209. 102
The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) reported on 26 November 2014 that it had has identified and thwarted a
group of individuals who had been tasked by the Russian special services to stage the declaration of a
“Transcarpathian Rus” people's republic. 103
That is not to say, however, there are no calls for Russia to intervene directly in Transcarpathia: the online
newspaper Russia Forever called for Russia “to conduct peacekeeping operations for a brief period” and for
“resumption of the pre-Soviet status of the Republic of Carpathian Ruthenia.” The quoted text reads in the original
Russian: “произвести миротворческую операцию, на краткий период — и возобновления досоветского
статуса Республики Подкарпатская Русь.” See: “Русинский вопрос. Какова могла бы быть позиция
России ” РоссияНавсегда.рф [published online in Russian, 28 October 2014].
http://rossiyanavsegda.ru/read/2421/. Last accessed 15 January 2014. 104
Brian Vitunic (2002). “Enclave To Exclave: Kaliningrad Between Russia And The European Union.” Columbia
University Working Paper. http://ece.columbia.edu/files/ece/images/enclave-1.pdf. Last accessed 15 January 2015.
Maintaining a Russian exclave in Transcarpathia would also be logistically challenging and, in the current climate,
politically toxic. 105
It has to be said, however, that the very vagueness of the term autonomy can be a source of strength as a policy
option, for autonomy can grant a degree of self-government to a particular group or region without necessarily
29 | F P R I
conceding independence or sovereignty. Sherrill Stroschein (2008). “Dismantling Ethnic Frames via Networks:
Defusing Separatism via Brokerage and Network Clientalism.” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the APSA
2008 Annual Meeting, Hynes Convention Center, Boston, Massachusetts, 28 August 2008, 3. 106
Source: http://conservativehome.blogs.com/centreright/2009/11/transnistria-a-hotbed-of-crime-human-rights-
abuses-and-a-risk-to-international-security.html. Last accessed 20 May 2015.
30 | F P R I
107
Theodore B. Ciuciura (2007). “Romanian views on Bessarabia and Bukovina: A Ukrainian perspective.”
Nationalities Papers: The Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity. 13:1, 106. 108
16 bcm of Russian natural gas transits Moldova each year through three pipelines en route to end-users in
southeastern Europe. 109
Source: Victor Parli ov & Tudor Şoitu ( 7). Industria Gazului În Rm: Povara Ignoranţei Şi Costul Erorilor.
(Chișinău: IDIS Viiitoru), .
31 | F P R I
ă
110
Presidential Decree No. 140, dated 18 May 1994 111
Moldovagaz (undated document). “Gas transmission system of the Republic of Moldova,” 3.
http://www.inogate.org/documents/___________%20__%20__________-1_eng.pdf. Last accessed 11 November
2014. 112
Victor Parli ov & Tudor Şoitu ( 7). Industria Gazului În Rm: Povara Ignoranţei Şi Costul Erorilor.
(Chișinău: IDIS Viiitoru), . 1 . One of the study's authors, Tudor Şoitu, was later named vice resident of
Moldova's Court of Account by parliamentary resolution (no. 131) signed 8 July 2011. 113
Parli ov & Şoitu ( 7), op cit., 14.
32 | F P R I
114
According to the GRoM Economy Ministry, “Moldovagaz SA is a single vertically integrated company, thus
having a monopoly position by controlling the entire chain of gas business (import, transit, transmission, wholesale
supply, distribution and retail supply). It is designated as the national operator of the gas system and dominant
supplier. It signs import contract with JSC Gazprom and an agreement for the use of gas storage in Ukraine.” See:
Ministry of Economy of the Republic of Moldova (2013). Security of Supply Statements of the Republic of Moldova,
p. 45. http://www.energy-community.org/pls/portal/docs/2440189.PDF. Last accessed 13 November 2014. 115
The agreement that led to Gazsnabtranzit's formation remains highly controversial. On 20 September 1994,
Moldovatransgaz, which was formed in 1993 to privatize state assets consisting of four gas transmission pipelines
inherited by Moldova in the breakup of the Soviet Union, entered into an agreement with Gazprom to form
Gazsnabtranzit. Gazprom received a 51 percent interest in Gazsnabtranzit in exchange for agreeing to extinguish
certain debts discussed above. 116
Moldova has challenged whether Gazprom actually fulfilled its pledge to reduce Moldova-ROT's debt by the
applicable amount. The amount included a sum for so-called “lost gas,” or the difference between the quantity of gas
recorded at import gas metering stations (located in Ukraine) and the quantity recorded at Moldovan export metering
stations. Since some pipelines go back and forth between Ukraine and Moldova more than once, and because no
meters are installed to measure the volume of gas at each exit/entry point, Ukraine and Moldova negotiate annually
to allocate amounts to domestic consumption in the two countries. The difference between the amount allocated to
Moldova and the amount Moldova can account for as domestic consumption is called “lost gas,” which in 1996
amounted to 5% of domestic Moldovan consumption. The actual language used in the authorizing agreement is “the
debts of the Republic of Moldova for the gas supplied to consumers during 1993-1994.” At the beginning of 1994,
Moldova’s debt to Gaz rom amounted to USD . m, including USD14.3m attributable to Transdniestria. 117 This figure was arsed between the valuation assigned to the naniev-Drochia-Cernăuţi-Bogorodceani
transmission gas pipeline (20.3%) and the one assigned to Moldova-ROT distribution networks controlled by raion-
level ublic agencies (13.4%). See: Parli ov & Şoitu ( 7), op cit., 19.
33 | F P R I
118
“The Romania-Moldova Gas Pipeline: A Chance for Moldova to Connect to the EU.” Natural Gas Europe
[published online 3 October 2013]. http://www.naturalgaseurope.com/romania-moldova-gas-pipeline. Last accessed
4 November 2014. 119
Adrian Lupusor, et al. (2013). Quo Vadis Moldova: European Integration, Euroasiatic Integration, or Status
Quo? Report published by the Expert-Grup (September 2013), 12. 120
This is up from approximately USD500m a decade earlier. The Moldovan position is expressed in a September
2012 statement by parliamentarian (and in July 2014, Deputy Prime Minister in charge of Moldova's economics
ministry) Adrian Candu, who said, “As regards the debt of Transnistria, Gazprom should acknowledge the existence
of two amounts. One belongs to the Transnistrian region and the other one to Moldova. The second one is
significantly lower.” See: “Candu: Gaz rom should ac nowledge that Moldova’s debt is small com ared with that
of Transnistria.” Moldova.org [published online in English 18 September 2012]. http://www.moldova.org/candu-
gazprom-should-acknowledge-that-moldovas-debt-is-small-compared-with-that-of-transnistria-232995-eng/. Last
accessed 5 November 2014. 121
“Gazprom and Moldovan (Transnistrian) Gas Debts.” Classified cable from United States Ambassador Michael
D. Kirby to the Secretary of State dated 30 January 2008.
https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08CHISINAU90_a.html. Last accessed 7 November 2014.
34 | F P R I
122
The area is bounded on the south by the Beli Lom and Kamchiya rivers; on the west by the lower Danube River;
on the north by the Chilia Arm River; and on the east by the Black Sea. 123
Oana Popescu (2011). “The Current State of Relations Between Romania and Kosovo and Prospects For
Evolution.” In Kosovo Calling: International Conference to Launch Position Papers on Kosovo's Relation with EU
and Regional Non-recognising Countries. (Pristina: Kosovo Foundation for Open Society), 61 & 83.
http://kfos.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Kosovo-Calling-ENG.pdf. Last accessed 1 December 2014. Regarding
the reference to “treaties,” Bulgaria surrendered all wartime territorial gains except Southern Dobruja under the
terms of its October 1944 armistice with the Soviet Union. See: United States Library of Congress (1992). Bulgaria:
a country study. (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office), p. 43. The line separating Dobruja into northern
and southern halves was an arbitrary one, and was redrawn several times during the early 20th century in the
aftermath of the First and Second Balkan Wars and World War One. Ibid., 62. 124
Romania has prospective shale gas resources in two sedimentary basins: in eastern Romania's Carpathian
Foreland Basin along the border with Moldova; and in southern Romania, in both the Moesian Platform along the
Black Sea littoral, and in an east-west corridor below Craiova and Bucharest. Technically recoverable resources in
the southern Romanian portion of the Moesian Platform (which extends into Bulgarian Northern Dobruja) are
35 | F P R I
estimated to be 26 Tcf of shale gas. See: EIA/ARI World Shale Gas and Shale Oil Resource Assessment (2013).
Arlington, VA: Advanced Resources International), X-23.
http://www.eia.gov/analysis/studies/worldshalegas/pdf/chaptersviii_xiii.pdf. Last accessed 22 November 2014 125
The Barlad Concession is a 6350km2 (1.6 million acres) exploration, development and production block located
in northeastern Romania's Vaslui and Constanța județe near the eastern Moldavian city of Bârlad. Chevron acquired
it from Regal Petroleum PLC, which held it since January 2005 under terms of a 2003 license from the Romanian
government. The Barlad Concession has a potential term of 30 years of which the first 5 years are scheduled for
exploration, in 2 phases, the first of which was completed as of December 2006. The first 3-year exploration phase
requires the acquisition of certain seismic, field geochemistry studies (completed by Regal as of December 2006)
and the drilling of 2 wells. In October 2007, Regal announced the first of its planned exploration wells in the Barlad
Concession established shows of gas; however, in September 2010, Regal, the chief operations of which are in
Ukraine, announced that it had been unable to establish commercial gas flow from the well. 126
Source: Chevron Romania (http://www.chevron.ro/en/business/). 127
“Chevron seeks to play down Romanian shale gas exploration fears.” Platts McGraw Hill Financial [published
online 5 April 2012]. http://www.platts.com/latest-news/natural-gas/london/chevron-seeks-to-play-down-romanian-
shale-gas-8152972. Last accessed 18 November 2012. 128
Vladimir Socor (2012). “Chevron Postpones Shale Gas Exploration in Romania.” Eurasia Daily Monitor
[published online 10 April 2012].
http://www.jamestown.org/single/?tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=39247&no_cache=1#.VGy5or64mOE. Last
accessed 18 November 2014. 129
“Chevron gets exploratory drilling permit for shale gas in Romania.” Business Review [published online, 28
January 2013]. http://business-review.eu/featured/chevron-gets-exploratory-drilling-permit-for-shale-gas-in-
romania-38472. Last accessed 18 November 2014.; “Chevron to proceed with drilling for shale gas in Romania.”
36 | F P R I
Natural Gas Europe [online edition, 28 February 2013]. http://www.naturalgaseurope.com/chevron-drilling-for-
shale-gas-in-romania. Last accessed 19 November 2014. 130
Ioana Patran (2013). “Thousands protest Chevron's shale gas plans in Romania.” Reuters [published online 4
April 2013]. http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/04/us-romania-shale-chevron-idUSBRE9330S320130404. Last
accessed 18 November 2014. 131
“Romanian Prime Minister announces 'we don’t have shale'.” Shale Energy Insider [published online 10
November 2014]. http://www.shaleenergyinsider.com/2014/11/10/romania-prime-minister-announces-we-dont-
have-shale/. Last accessed 18 November 2014. 132
“Ponta says Romania has no shale gas, Chevron begs to differ.” EurActiv [published online, 10 November 2014].
http://www.euractiv.com/sections/energy/ponta-says-romania-has-no-shale-gas-chevron-begs-differ-309896. Last
accessed 18 November 2014. 133133
Гаяне Чичакян (2014). “Сланцевого газа, который «так упорно искали» США, в Румынии
не оказалось.” RT [published in Russian 12 November 2014]. http://russian.rt.com/article/59221. Last accessed 18
November 2014. The quoted text is from the version of the article published on RT's English-language website,
which differs from the original one published on RT's Russian-language website. For the English-language article by
correspondent Gayane Chichakyan, see: “Shale gas: boom or bubble?” http://rt.com/business/204803-shale-gas-
boom-bubble/. Last accessed 18 November 2014. 134
Chevron in May 2014 announced that the company had commenced drilling its first shale gas exploration well in
the județ of Vaslui on the Romanian-Moldavan border. Earlier, Chevron twice suspended shale gas exploration in
eastern Romania when it encountered protests and the occupation of a drilling site. Chevron also holds three shale-
gas exploration blocks in Romania's southeastern Dobrogea region. [“Chevron Commences Shale Gas Drilling in
Romania.” Natural Gas Europe [published online 6 May 2014]. http://www.naturalgaseurope.com/chevron-
commences-shale-gas-drilling-in-romania. Last accessed 17 November 2014.]. United States armed forces are
stationed at the nearby Mihail Kogalniceanu military base. [“Romania wants more NATO troops locally, even
permanent base: 'Russian threat is a reality, and we need support'.” Romania-Insider [published online in English 1
May 2014]. http://www.romania-insider.com/romania-wants-more-nato-troops-locally-even-permanent-base-
russian-threat-is-a-reality-and-we-need-support/120564/. Last accessed 17 November 2014]NIS Gazprom Neft
emerged from Gazprom's January 2008 acquisition of a majority stake (51%, later raised to 56%) in a Serbian oil
and gas company, NIS, which was founded in 1949. NIS-Gazprom is a vertically integrated energy company with
production sites in Serbia as well as Republika Srpska (one of the two entities that together comprise the state of
Bosnia and Herzegovina), Hungary, and Romania.While that might be true so far as Romania, it does not extend to
NIS-Gazprom's activities in Hungary, where the company engaged in shale gas exploration in the Algyö Formation
north of the geographic convergence point of Hungary, Serbia, and Romania. See: “Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd.
Announces Final Approval of A Multi-Well Drilling Exploration Program with Naftna Industrija Srbije Jsc ('NIS').”
Marketwired.com [published online 14 January 2013]. http://www.marketwired.com/press-release/falcon-oil-gas-
ltd-announces-final-approval-a-multi-well-drilling-exploration-program-tsx-venture-fo-1745443.htm. Last accessed
17 November 2014. Nor, it seems, does it apply to the company's activities in Serbia: “Serbia has a huge potential of
shale gas exploration and [NIS-Gazprom's] cooperation with Falcon in Hungary will allow us to learn and prepare
37 | F P R I
our geologists and engineers for such us technology challenge. Working with different international companies
abroad we going to find the right high technology experienced partner for further deep exploration in Serbia'.” See:
“Falcon Oil & Gas Ltd. and Naftna Industrija Srbije Announces Letter of Intent for Makó Trough Project.”
http://ir.nis.eu/news-and-events/single-news/article/22/. Last accessed 17 November 2014. 135
“ Gazprom has future plans in Romania, Balkans.” Actmedia Romanian News Agency [published online in
English 14 November 2013]. http://actmedia.eu/energy-and-environment/gazprom-has-future-plans-in-romania-
balkans/49167. Laast accessed 17 November 2014. 136
While the geographic territory of Dobrogea/Northern Dobruja is comparatively miniscule, the region's estimated
shale gas reserves (51 trillion cubic feet) are about 40 percent of known shale gas reserves in the much larger
Ukraine. See: Energy Transformation (2013). Shale Gas: An Opportunity Europe Cannot Afford to Miss. (Brussels:
Vital Transformation), 7. http://energytransformation.eu/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/ET-Shale-Gas-Report-HR.pdf.
Last accessed 17 November 2014. 137
Prior to Bulgaria's imposition of an indefinite moratorium on hydraulic fracturing in January 2012, over a dozen
companies expressed interest in prospecting for so-called “unconventional” gas deposits. Of these, Chevron was the
largest, and in June 2011, it was granted a 5-year permit to prospect for shale gas in Bulgaria's 4400 square
kilometer Novi Pazar field. The Novi Pazar field holds estimated reserves of between 300 billion and 1 trillion cubic
meters of shale gas based on similar rock formations. Once the moratorium was imposed, the Bulgarian government
declined to sign the Chevron license, and Chevron finally withdrew from Bulgaria in May 2014. According to an
official company statement, “Chevron has closed its office in Sofia, Bulgaria. The ban on hydraulic fracturing
imposed by the Bulgarian parliament in 2012 following Chevron's successful bid for an exploration permit in
northeast Bulgaria remains in place. Chevron continues to explore and evaluate investment opportunities in Central
and Eastern Europe.” See: http://www.chevron.com/countries/bulgaria/. Last accessed 17 November 2014. In
addition to Chevron and ROSGEO, Bulgaria granted exploration permits to two other companies. In March 2012,
Park Place Energy was granted an exploration permit for the Dobrich basin area; the company, however, later
qualified that its “work program does not contemplate in any way the exploration for shale gas which is presently
subject to a moratorium in Bulgaria” but rather, on “gas found in coals...often referred to as 'coal bed methane' or
'coal seam gas'.” [http://parkplaceenergy.com/park-place-energy-provides-exploration-program-details-for-the-
dobrich-basin/] A second company, TransAtlantic Petroleum, acquired control of an exploration permit through its
acquisition of Direct Petroleum Bulgaria EEOD, whose A-Lovech license covered a 300,000-acre area of Etropole
shale located in the southern Moesian Platform in northwest Bulgaria The parliamentary ban had the unintended
effect, later corrected in June 2012, of effectively prohibiting the extraction of conventional natural gas from deep
deposits, as well as making it illegal to use Bulgaria's sole gas storage facility at Chiren. The ban, which the
Bulgarian parliament adopted in the form of a resolution, was criticized by opponents of shale gas production, who
had called for a statutory ban. Tomasz D borows i & a ub Grosz ows i ( 1 ). Shale Gas in Bulgaria, the Czech
Republic and Romania. (Warsaw: O rode Studi w Wschodnich), 9.
http://www.osw.waw.pl/sites/default/files/shale_gas_in_bulgaria_the_czech_republic_and_romania_net_0.pdf. Last
accessed 21 November 2014.
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138
The author is aware of but cannot independently confirm from open sources persistent rumors that Overgas'
complex corporate structure is purposefully opaque, and may conceal the company's connection to individuals with
known or suspected ties to Russian intelligence agencies. What can be said is that Overgas Holding AD aka DDI
Holdings Ltd has a complex and opaque ownership structure. Its sole shareholder appears to be a British Virgin
Islands-registered corporation, South Eastern European Energy, Limited, which may be by another corporation, DDI
Management, which is apparently based in Bulgaria. The author of a February 2009 story about Overgas concluded
by asking, “Why is this elaborate web of holding companies, BVI entities, and nominal directors being used by
Overgas, Inc.? Is it to hide the identities of the ultimate beneficiaries? In many ways the Overgas scheme appears
similar to other opaque intermediaries-RosUkrEnergo, Centrex, Gazprom Germania, and YugoRosGas-which were
created by Gazprom over the past decade and in which Alexander Medvedev, a suspected former KGB agent, has
played a key role while enjoying the Kremlin's full support in these ventures.” See: Roman Kupchinsky (2009).
“Bulgaria's 'Overgas,' a Russian Spy in Canada, and Gazprom.” Eurasia Daily Monitor [published online 13
February 2009]. 6:30. http://www.jamestown.org/single/?tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=34511#.VLgRTlpN38s. Last
accessed 15 January 2015. 139
It also signed an agreement in May 2014 to build a gas distribution infrastructure in Dimitrovgrad, Serbia. See:
Borislava Tsankova Andreevska (2014). “Bulgaria’s Overgas to build gas su ly infrastructure in Serbia’s
Dimitrovgrad.” Power Market Review [published online in English 26 May 2014].
https://powermarket.seenews.com/news/bulgaria-s-overgas-to-build-gas-supply-infrastructure-in-serbia-s-
dimitrovgrad-422243. Last accessed 18 November 2014. 140
Wintershall-Bulgaria is a subsidiary of Wintershall Erdas Handelshaus Zug AG. The latter is a parity joint
venture between a wholly owned BASF Group subsidiary, Wintershall, and OAO Gazprom. The prefix “OAO” is
the acronym of the Russian transliteration, Otkrytoye Aktsionernoye Obshchestvo [Russian: Открытое
Акционерное Общество] which means “open joint stock company,” a common form of organization for Russian
publicly-traded corporations. 141
ROSGEO in June 2014 signed a collaboration agreement with Gazprom “in the use of innovative technologies in
hydrocarbon production, particularly regarding the recovery of 'tight' (hard-to-recover) reserves.” See:
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Quoted in Geoffrey Kemp & Robert Harkavy (1997). Strategic Geography and the Changing Middle East:
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Nailya Tagirova (2007). “Mapping the Empire's Economic Regions from the Nineteenth to the Early Twentieth
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Stanislav L. Tkachenko (2008). “Actors in Russia's Energy Policy Toward the EU.” In Pami Aalto, ed. The EU-
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(Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic & International Studies), 1.
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